• Please visit and share your knowledge at our sister communities:
  • If you have not, please join our official Homebrewing Facebook Group!

    Homebrewing Facebook Group

Help wiring a Auber EzBoil DSPR1

Homebrew Talk

Help Support Homebrew Talk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

epoxyoyo

Member
Joined
Mar 17, 2015
Messages
7
Reaction score
1
Guys, Need your help. According to the diagram on their website for the DSPR1 Ezboil controller it shows power going to pins 9 and 10 and branching to the SSR. I am wiring this for 240 volts. Looking at the screws on the back of the unit they are too small for a regular yellow terminal connector for 10 guage wire. Anyone hooked up one of these units and if so what did you use? I have a 50 amp spa panel feeding this box and controller. I plan to use 10 guage SOOW cord from the spa panel to the controller and SSR and the same cord out to the 5500W heating element.
 
When wiring a panel that has a number of devices requiring power it is good to have some sort of "power distribution buss". In control panels it is common to have a separate distribution buss for L1, L2, Neutral and Ground.

While you say you are only putting together a bare-bones system, a power buss gives you an easy way to expand it in the future if you add pumps, or other devices.

The buss can just be a terminal strip where you can connected other devices like your controller with any size of wire and terminal you choose.

As you mentioned, the EZ-boil has smallish terminals due to its minimal power requirements. You could use a 16 gauge wire to connect it to your main power distribution buss.
Trying to distribute power in a "daisy chain" fashion, the way you describe, can be done, but is much more difficult and you need to know how to do it in a way that doesn't unintentionally limit power to any given device. That's the advantage of using a power distribution bus.
A power distribution buss can also incorporate fuses or circuit breakers to protect individual loads.

As an alternative to a power buss, you also could just crimp a smaller gauge wire with a large gauge wire in a suitable crimp terminal to tap off a power lead for the EZ-boil.
 
Hee....
Hard to imagine needing anything larger than 12 gauge INSIDE the control box. ...and as PH advised, 16 (or even 18) gauge would be fine for powering the EZ-Boil device itself.
 
Thanks guys. That explains it pretty well not sure I will ever expand it so tying in a 16 gauge wire should do it. Now to get at it.
 
Back
Top